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Edmonton Oilers Loss of Speed Could Have Costly Impact Moving Forward – The Hockey Writers – Edmonton Oilers

Projected Lineups for the Kings vs Oilers – Game 5 - The Hockey Writers - Projected Lineups

While the Edmonton Oilers are expected to be a very good team again in 2024-25, they will look significantly different. Following their trip to the Stanley Cup Final, they added forwards Viktor Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner in free agency and signed defenceman Josh Brown.

Related: Oilers: 4 Players They Should Consider Signing to a PTO

They moved on from Warren Foegele, who signed as a free agent with the LA Kings, as well as Vincent Desharnais, who signed with the Vancouver Canucks. Many expected those to be the only significant changes to the Oilers roster this offseason, but that has been far from the case.

Less than a week after free agency opened, the Oilers announced that they had traded Ryan McLeod to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for prospect Matthew Savoie. Since then, they have lost Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway to offer sheets extended by the St. Louis Blues and traded Cody Ceci to the San Jose Sharks. To help soften the blow of those losses, they have brought in forward Vasily Podkolzin and defenceman Ty Emberson.

Though the fan base has some mixed feelings about the offseason as a whole, the consensus is that the Oilers are a better team than they were a season ago, even though their blue line took a hit. Defence might not be the only area to worry about, however, as all three forwards who departed, Foegele, McLeod, and Holloway, had one thing in common that the Oilers are suddenly lacking.

Speed No Longer the Oilers’ Forte

For many years, the Oilers were known for their devastating team speed. Good skaters are more and more of an asset in the NHL, a league which seems to get quicker every season. However, the team seems to be going with a different blueprint this season (from ‘Allan Mitchell: Are the Oilers fast enough without Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway?’ The Athletic 08/22/24).

Of their free-agent signings upfront, Arvidsson is a good skater, though not as quick as he was in his early days due to numerous injuries. Skinner, meanwhile, is agile, but his overall speed is relatively average compared to his peers. The Oilers still have some speed up front, particularly in Connor McDavid, who is the fastest skater in the world. Zach Hyman also plays with plenty of pace, particularly on the forecheck. But team speed drops off dramatically in the bottom six.

The Oilers re-signed four of their bottom six forwards who were set to become unrestricted free agents this summer. Adam Henrique is the…

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